Marketing Success Secrets for Tech Startups

By John Ortbal

It is estimated that 40 percent of venture backed companies fail; 40 percent return moderate amounts of capital; and only 20 percent or less produce high returns. It is the small percentage of high return deals that are most responsible for the venture capital industry consistently performing above the public markets. So what separates the zeroes from the heroes?

Thought Leadership is a Primary Differentiator

It’s true that launching a new company or growing a young company requires an outstanding product/service, but marketplaces today are so cluttered with new and innovative ideas that the real differentiator in my experience is thought leadership.

How does one define thought leadership? Here’s how writer Shel Israel in Forbes magazine described the concept:

“A thought leader is someone who looks at the future and sets a course for it that others will follow. Thought leaders look at existing best practices then come up with better practices. They foment change, often causing great disruption.”

Not everyone can be a thought leader on the scale of Steven Jobs or Martin Luther King. For most young companies, it’s enough to be a thought leader for a specific audience or niche market.

To establish thought leadership you have to know your audience, understand what motivates them emotionally as well as rationally, and stake out a position that presents a unique perspective. Keep in mind that your positioning is not thought leadership unless it breaks through the status quo to challenge the conventional thinking or habits of your audience.

Plus, when positioning yourself as a thought leader in your space, you’ve got to reposition all your competitors as lacking in both vision and capabilities.

.

Redefine the Playing Field According to Your Rules

Time and again I’ve seen startup or emerging growth tech companies floundering in search of the “right” messages to demonstrate the superiority of their products. What they should be concentrating on is creating a context or playing field that leads inevitably to the conclusion that their product is the right solution for the problem situation.

In most cases that means re-defining or refreshing the perceptions surrounding the category where your product/solution plays. So when you stake out a thought leadership positioning and start promoting your agenda, you’ve got to define the new rules and convince others of their validity and value.

This of course is not nearly as easy as it sounds. You’ve got to understand your audience and marketplace, see where customers are frustrated and in pain, and give your audience hope that there is a reasoned, workable solution within their grasp. Ω

.

John Ortbal is president, Services Marketing Group.http://servicesmarketinggroup.com/
For the past 15 years, he’s been a key contributor in marketing software and hardware technology startups and early growth stage companies in the US with a focus on developing brand positioning and revitalizing young firms. His team members are now VP’s of Marketing and CMO’s at successful technology companies across the country. Helping to launch a dozen or more tech companies that were eventually acquired by larger enterprises, he’s learned a few lessons in marketing.

This article is adapted from the Journal of the Heartland Angels. The newsletter is available here. (PDF)

NEWS FROM HEARTLAND – the Journal of the Heartland Angels, is published quarterly as an information service to its members. Articles may be reproduced in full with attribution for educational purposes.

Chicago Venture Magazine is a publication of Nathaniel Press www.ChicagoVentureMagazine.com Comments and re-posts in full or in part are welcomed and encouraged if accompanied by attribution and a web link. This is not investment advice.We do not guarantee accuracy. It’s not our fault if you lose money.